How Aggregation Matters for Measured Wage Growth

Author:

Morris Michael1,Rich Robert W.2ORCID,Tracy Joseph1

Affiliation:

1. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

2. Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Abstract

Wage growth is often measured by the change in average hourly earnings (AHE), a gauge of overall wages that aggregates information on earnings and hours worked across individuals. A close look at this aggregation method demonstrates that AHE growth reflects disproportionately the profile of high-earning workers who typically display lower and less cyclically sensitive wage growth. Using data from the Current Population Survey (CPS), we adopt a different aggregation method and compute wage growth as the average of individuals’ wage growth. The analysis indicates that the CPS measure of average wage growth is significantly higher than AHE growth and that it displays a more meaningful nonlinear relationship with the Congressional Budget Office’s unemployment gap. Last, our findings do not support the claim that there is still hidden labor market slack restraining wage growth.

Publisher

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Reference15 articles.

1. Ashley, Richard, and Randal Verbrugge. 2019. “Variation in the Phillips Curve Relation across Three Phases of the Business Cycle.” Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Working Paper No. 2019-09. https://doi.org/10.26509/frbc-wp-201909.

2. Becker, Gary S. 1975. Human Capital. New York, Cambridge University Press.

3. Bils, Mark J. 1985. “Real Wages over the Business Cycle: Evidence from Panel Data.” Journal of Political Economy, 93(4): 666-689. https://doi.org/10.1086/261325.

4. Blank, Rebecca M. 1990. “Why Are Wages Cyclical in the 1970s?” Journal of Labor Economics, 8(1): 16-47. https://www.jstor.org/stable/2535297.

5. Bureau of Labor Statistics. 2018. “Chapter 2. Employment, Hours, and Earnings from the Establishment Survey.” In BLS Handbook of Methods. Washington DC. https://www.bls.gov/opub/hom/pdf/ces-20110307.pdf4.

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